
At Study Hall Junior’s Open House: Our Learning Labs, science didn’t stay in textbooks — it came alive in classrooms, corridors, and curious young minds. This annual event was a vibrant celebration of hands-on, inquiry-driven learning, where each class explored scientific themes and turned their learning into working models, live experiments, and even theatrical conversations with great scientists!
From Class 1 to Class 5, our students weren’t just learning science — they were doing science. They asked questions, built models, tested theories, and presented their discoveries with confidence and clarity. Classrooms were transformed into buzzing learning labs where curiosity was the guiding force and imagination had no limits.
Class 1 explored the basics of the world around them: understanding the day and night cycle, the magnetic force, absorption, and how sound creates vibration. They also conducted colorful experiments demonstrating capillary action, showing how colors travel through water — a perfect example of learning through wonder.
Class 2 delved deeper into natural forces, discovering how air occupies space and moves things. They learned about the water cycle, and used simple experiments to explore how vibrations create sound and how sound waves travel — bringing abstract scientific phenomena to life in accessible and meaningful ways.
Class 3 took on big ideas with big excitement — from understanding gravity and magnetic pull to creating visual demonstrations of capillary action. These young learners impressed everyone with their ability to explain and demonstrate scientific principles through play and observation.
Class 4 created a true highlight of the Open House with their theme: Garden of Great Minds. Their corner featured an engaging “Time Travel Talk” between Thomas Alva Edison and Madam Curie, helping children understand the difference between invention and discovery, and how electricity came to be. From the blubbery experiment to model-making around how electricity is produced, students explored the importance of sustainable energy and the future of solar power. With support from science educator Mr. Inderjeet Singh, they built working solar panel models, understanding the environmental impact of fossil fuels and the need to shift toward cleaner sources. It was inquiry-based learning at its best — thoughtful, hands-on, and connected to real-world challenges.
Class 5 took us across time and space with their creative “Time Travel Talks”, where students became Galileo and Alexander Graham Bell, interviewing each other to share their discoveries and inventions. They explained scientific principles behind the telescope, pendulum, sound waves, and even recreated planetary models to explore the universe and our place in it.
Across all classes, students didn’t just display what they had learned — they took us on a journey through their learning process. They investigated, experimented, reflected, and then proudly presented their work. This Open House was a powerful reminder of what children can achieve when we make space for exploration, creativity, and experiential learning in our classrooms.
At Study Hall Junior, we believe that science is not just a subject — it’s a way of thinking, questioning, and understanding the world. The Learning Labs Open House was a reflection of this belief, and of our commitment to transforming education into something joyful, meaningful, and future-ready.